BX24 and blackberries

   / BX24 and blackberries #1  

ore540

Bronze Member
Joined
Jul 11, 2007
Messages
61
Location
Southern Oregon
Tractor
Kubota BX24
First, thanks to all on TBN for the advice that led to the purchase of my BX24 birthday present.

One of the main justifications for buying the tractor was to keep the blackberries along our seasonal creek under control. Besides sucking up land they're a fire hazard in this country. For a number of reasons it's been difficult to spray and the rocks and size of the area made using regular mowers and (big) weedeaters difficult. Besides, I needed a tractor! :D

Bought it with a 48" Big Bee rear mower (which does have a stump-jumper). Added a Markham toothbar and Bro-Tek skid plates.

The little beast works great. Use the FEL and toothbar to lift and then rake back the vines and also check for rocks, car parts, etc. That thinned the vines and brought them down so I could get over them. Then either mow forward over it or back into the thinned area.

First pass was a little slow - looking for those rocks and the odd hole - but went quicker as I figured how things worked.
mowing009e.jpg


Had a few day delay when the mower found about 10' of 3/8" steel bar that was disguised as a berry vine :( It wrapped around the shaft a couple of times and was beyond my tools (for now) so I paid the dealer to get it out. After that I checked under the vines even more carefully.

Once I got the mower back, the rest of the first section went pretty quickly.
Berries014e.jpg


Here's some more pictures of my progress.

Next step is to get a culvert into the creek before the water starts to run. Then I can get the tractor to the other side even when the rains come. I should be able to get it cleaned up before next summer's fire season. Once the creek dries up again I'll spray it. A couple of years of mowing and spraying should get it under some kind of control.

-- Larry
 
   / BX24 and blackberries #2  
Nice pics, sorry to hear about your vine problem. Worst feeling in the world, take out a brand new mower and hear a big bang an hour into the project. I always wince when I hear a big bang behind me.
 
   / BX24 and blackberries #3  
I did that one time, and just anchored the end and pulled the piece off by driving away from it very slowly. I would stop ever few inches to raise the bar over the bolts of the blades, and then pull again. Torch was at home, so I couldn't get to it out in the middle of a field, but slow but sure worked fine.
David from jax
 
   / BX24 and blackberries #4  
when i was clearing 10ft+ high blackberries in the pasture i brushogged two garbage bags full of cans and glass. yeah that was fun.. former owner apparently thought it was easier to just toss his garbage in the blackberries. didn't cause any damage to the brushhog but scared the snot out of me when it happened, it was loud. after i realized what it was i cursed him the rest of the day.. from then on i removed the remaining blackberries ever so cautiously. last winter i was removing another section and was watching my front wheels very closely when one raised up a bit, i kept going but noticed a handle so i backed out and uncovered and old rusty wheelbarrow buried under the vines. that would have deserved two days of cursing and possibly a bill..

congrats on your new tractor, i've determined mine to be a must have, it's already increase the value of my land by at least 2x the machine purchase price.

be safe out there, bb's can harbor some nasty stuff.
 
   / BX24 and blackberries #5  
It makes me ill please box up all of those berry vines and send them to me. I would love to have that problem.
 
   / BX24 and blackberries
  • Thread Starter
#7  
Jimbrown said:
It makes me ill please box up all of those berry vines and send them to me. I would love to have that problem.

:D If you had a little more water in AZ you wouldn't mourn them. :D Even after I get this bunch cleaned up I'll still have about 400' of property line covered in the things. I love the berries, jam and pies but that's more than enough to cover the need. You wouldn't believe how these things take over if they find a little water, they've even stopped the deer from crossing the place.

When I ordered my skid plates from Bro-Tek, the fellow was fascinated that I was going to mow the berries. He was just getting ready to plant some. I guess things grow differently in Arizona and New Brunswick. :)
 
   / BX24 and blackberries #8  
Hidden barb wire usually gets me worse than anything else. It wraps around everything and is a pain to get loose. Even with gloves, you still get a nick or two when unwrapping it from the spindle shaft.
Instead of bush hogging them, is it a viable option to use the back hoe to dig them out so you don't have to keep mowing them? The answer is the back hoe is probably too slow, but I was curious just how bad it would be. We don't have that problem here, although I have the solution if we ever do...
I would assume that your back hoe has an auxilary pump, so I was wondering also if mounting a mower deck on the hoe, in place of the bucket would be a good idea. Makes it into a boom mower, after a fashion. A hydraulic motor and a small deck would be easy to rig up to make one. Mine is a flail mower which would take a little more fabrication work.
David from jax
 
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   / BX24 and blackberries #9  
Goats! My Boer Goats love blackberry vines. They will eat them down to the ground and eventually kill the plants. They also love Privet, weeds, other weeds, then grass.

Chris
 
   / BX24 and blackberries
  • Thread Starter
#10  
firefighter9208 said:
Goats! My Boer Goats love blackberry vines. They will eat them down to the ground and eventually kill the plants. They also love Privet, weeds, other weeds, then grass.

Chris

And star thistle, bless their scheming little hearts. Didn't even know I had it until after they were gone. We used to have 4 pygmy goats and they did keep the berries back. Wouldn't eat the big vines but all the newer stuff was gone.

Unfortunately they also love tree bark. Had to wrap fencing around all of our trees in the field - they stripped and killed a 6" diameter cedar in their first hour in the field :eek: A little learning experience. Then there was the time they got up to the house and sampled the siding :rolleyes: They were fun though.
 

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